Tuesday, June 5, 2012

1206.0557 (Paweł Wajer et al.)

Behavior of Jupiter Non-Trojan Co-Orbitals    [PDF]

Paweł Wajer, Małgorzata Królikowska
Searching for the non-Trojan Jupiter co-orbitals we have numerically integrated orbits of 3\,160 asteroids and 24 comets discovered by October 2010 and situated within and close to the planet co-orbital region. Using this sample we have been able to select eight asteroids and three comets and have analyzed their orbital behavior in a great detail. Among them we have identified five new Jupiter co-orbitals: \cu, \sa, \ql, \gh, and \Larsen, as well as we have analyzed six previously identified co-orbitals: \hr, \ug, \qq, \aee, \wc\ and \ar. \cu\ is currently on a quasi-satellite orbit with repeatable transitions into the tadpole state. Similar behavior shows \gh\ which additionally librates in a compound tadpole-quasi-satellite orbit. \ql\ and \Larsen\ are the co-orbitals of Jupiter which are temporarily moving in a horseshoe orbit occasionally interrupted by a quasi-satellite behavior. \sa\ is moving in a pure horseshoe orbit. Orbits of the latter three objects are unstable and according to our calculations, these objects will leave the horseshoe state in a few hundred years. Two asteroids, \qq\ and \aee, are long-lived quasi-satellites of Jupiter. They will remain in this state for a few thousand years at least. The comets \ar\ and \wc\ are also quasi-satellites of Jupiter. However, the non-gravitational effects may be significant in the motion of these comets. We have shown that \wcs\ is moving in a quasi-satellite orbit and will stay in this regime to at least 2500 year. Asteroid \hr\ will be temporarily captured in a quasi-satellite orbit near 2050 and we have identified another one object which shows similar behavior - the asteroid \ug, although, its guiding center encloses the origin, it is not a quasi-satellite. The orbits of these two objects can be accurately calculated for a few hundred years forward and backward.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1206.0557

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